War-ravaged Syrian fencer cuts a lonely figure at Youth Olympic Games

War-ravaged Syrian fencer cuts a lonely figure at Youth Olympic Games

Syrian fencer Mohammad Shaheen has cut a lonely figure at the Youth Olympic Games. With no coach to talk tactics with, or fencing team mates to lift his spirits, Shaheen lost all of his epee bouts and made an early exit from Nanjing.

Medals were never his target, though.

Shaheen said his team's goal in China was to fly the flag for Syria, which is mired in a civil war that has killed 170,000 people since 2011.

'He left because of the war'

“I had a coach from Tunisia. He made me a good fencer, but he left because of the war,” said Shaheen. “Because of the war, it’s not safe for him. But I am Syrian. I think I should be there because that is my country.”

Shaheen says he has got used to going it alone.

Please click NEXT to read more...

Image: Girls queue to buy bread at the only bakery serving the outskirts of Idlib provincePhotographs: Zohra Bensemra/Reuters

'Medals don't matter to me'

Shaheen lost all six of his epee pool bouts, and then was beaten by eventual silver medallist Linus Islas Flygare of Sweden in the last 16.

“The medals don’t matter to me, but I want to be a champion. It’s not easy for good fencers to beat me,” he said. “Right now I’m losing, but I think that maybe, I hope, I will be better after a few years.”